Issues of concern to people who live in the west: property rights, water rights, endangered species, livestock grazing, energy production, wilderness and western agriculture. Plus a few items on western history, western literature and the sport of rodeo... Frank DuBois served as the NM Secretary of Agriculture from 1988 to 2003. DuBois is a former legislative assistant to a U.S. Senator, a Deputy Assistant Secretary of Interior, and is the founder of the DuBois Rodeo Scholarship.
Tuesday, January 27, 2015
Bison not cattle's top competitor for range forage, ecologists say
...So, for ranchers leasing Bureau of Land Management-owned land for grazing beef cattle in southeastern Utah's Henry Mountains, where Ranglack studies bison, it's logical to assume the large, free-ranging herbivores are the livestock's main competitor for forage.
But that's not the case, Ranglack says. The biggest consumer, he discovered after two years of study, is actually the much smaller, and less conspicuous, rabbit. With faculty mentor Johan du Toit, professor in USU's Department of Wildland Resources and Ecology Center and USU statistician Susan Durham, Ranglack published findings in the Jan. 26, 2015 issue of the Journal of Applied Ecology. The team's research was supported by the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources.
"As we started the study, we first met with ranchers to measure their perceptions of wildlife-livestock conflict in the Henry Mountains," Ranglack says. "Most felt bison were consuming more than their share."
The Henry Mountains bison are descendants of animals transplanted to the area from Yellowstone National Park in 1941 and thought to be one of the few genetically pure groups of the species. Challenges for the UDWR, which manages the bison, are determining how many of the animals live in the area in a given year, where they prefer to forage, the impact they have on available cattle forage and how many should be harvested during the hunting season. Ranglack and colleagues constructed 40 grazing exclosures in the conflict area to observe foraging behavior. Cattle consumed about 52 percent of the total grass biomass on the shared range, while bison ate about 13 percent. Lagomorphs – that is, jackrabbits and cottontail rabbits – gobbled up about 34 percent of the food. "Because they're nocturnal and small, lagomorphs are less noticeable on the landscape," Ranglack says. "Unless you look closely – as we walked around shared grazing areas, we found rabbit pellets everywhere."
Looking at the big picture, the rabbits' proliferation comes into focus.
"With a reduced coyote population, lagomorph populations are likely higher than what we would expect naturally," Ranglack says. "Lagomorphs' nutritional needs also affect their choice and consumption of forage."
Pound for pound, rabbits eat much more than bison and the big-eared mammals need food of higher quality because they metabolize it quickly, he says.
"In contrast, bison can live on food of much lower nutritional quality because they digest their food so slowly," Ranglack says. "It takes up to 80 hours for grass to pass through a bison's digestive system, which gives plenty of time for nutrients to be absorbed."...more
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